28 December 2010

Benjamin Brittenwas born on the feast of Saint Cecilia, November 22nd. 1913 in Lowestoft Suffolk. Edward Benjamin Britten began to compose at the age of nine. He studied under Frank Bridge and at the Royal College of Music. One of his earliest successes was 'Les Illuminations' (a song cycle set to the poems of Arthur Rimbaud). He was a conscientious objector and lived in the United States from 1939-1942. He wrote all sorts of music including the monumental anti war pieces 'War Requiem' and 'Sinfonia da Requiem'. He was friends with, and collaborated on various projects with Christopher Isherwood and W.H. Auden (an anti war film).

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Throughout his career he had other associations such as the actor David Hemmings, who was a starring boy soprano in many of Britten's earlier stage works. In 1947 he founded the Aldeburgh Festival. In 1976, just a few months before his death, he became the first musician to be made a peer with the title Baron Britten of Aldeburgh, in the County of Suffolk. Peter Pears was Knighted in 1978.

His and Pears life together was one of the greatest loves and creative collaborations of the twentieth century. When Benjamin Britten met Peter Pears in the thirties they began a partnership that lasted until Britten's death in 1976. So strong was this relationship that it is difficult to find a mention or photograph of one without reference to the other. Britten wrote most of his songs, parables, music and operas for Pears to interpret. The tenor Pears had a light voice of beautiful tone and it is the benchmark for the realisation of the works of Benjamin Britten, who obviously wrote for and was influenced by that voice that he loved so much. In a book 'Britten, Voice and Piano' by Graham Johnson, a pianist, specialising in accompanying, who worked with Britten and Pears when they were old-ish and he was young, he says that he noticed, when working on Death in Venice with Pears, that a harmony when Aschenbach sees Tadzio - 'Here comes Eros, his very self'Act 1 scene 5:was the same as one near the end of the Michelangelo Sonnets. He commented on this to Britten, who said "Look at the direction on the second to last line (of the sonnets)". The direction was "Sempre pp", i.e. "always pianissimo". The code of course means "Always Peter Pears". Johnson said he found this intentional connection between the first and last works dedicated to Peter very moving. In November 1975, Britten was ailing and in Venice. I was there at the same time. Perhaps I unknowingly bumped into him in the Piazza. He returned to England, continued to write and on the 4th December 1976 he died of heart failure in the arms of Peter Pears. In Pears words "the only thing he regretted was leaving me" Peter Pears died ten years later of a heart attack on the 3rd of April 1986. He was buried next to Benjamin Britten in their grave at Aldeburgh.

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The Compositions of Benjamin Britten

Benjamin Britten's first compositions were made at the age of about five but at the age of nineteen began his main body of work that are shown below. There were also other works that have not been given an official number.

Gemini VariationsOp 73 quartet for two players 1965
Songs and Proverbs of William Blake,Op. 74. For baritone and piano

Voices for Today,Op. 75. For chorus of men, women, and children, and organ
The Poet's Echo,Op. 76. Text by Aleksandr Pushkin. For high voice and piano
The Building of the House OvertureOp. 79 overture with or without chorus1967

Suite for HarpOp 83 1969
Who are these children ?,Op. 84. Text by Soutar. For tenor and piano
Canticle IV: Journey of the Magi,Op. 86. Text by T. S. Eliot. For countertenor, tenor, baritone, and piano 1971

Third Suite for CelloOp 87

Canticle V: The death of St. Narcissus,Op. 89. Text by T. S. Eliot. For tenor and harp1974

Suite on English Folk Tunes:A time there was…Op. 90

Sacred and Profane,Op. 91. For unaccompanied voices 1975
A Birthday Hansel,Op. 92. For high voice and harp
Phaedra,Op. 93. Text by Robert Lowell. Dramatic cantata for mezzo-soprano and small orchestra

String Quartet No 3Op 94

Welcome Ode, Op. 95.For young people's chorus and orchestra 1976

The Operas

The great influences on Britten's music as far as I am concerned were Peter Pears, the sea, his homosexuality and his pacifism.

Paul Bunyan. Op 171941 Libretto by W.H.Auden. An Operetta first performed at Columbia University, New York in 1941. A moral fable of a band of honest loggers compromising beliefs from the innocence and cooperation of brotherhood to the trials of progress.

Peter Grimes. Op 331945 Derived from the poem of George Crabb 'The Borough' The most famous and successful of his operas first produced in 1945. Grimes is interrogated about the accidental death of his apprentice. He finds a new boy and soon mistreats him until the boy falls from a cliff and Grimes madness leads to his death at sea. A psychological drama of sublimated love and madness. The anguish of the torn emotions of Grimes is 0one of the great portraits in opera.

The Rape of Lucretia. Op 37 1946 In 1946 he moved from the grandness of Grimes to the chamber opera whose theme is the destruction of virtue and beauty. Poetic, inventive, ritualistic and interpreting the ancient tale of Ovid via the play of Andre Obey into the Judaeo-Christian viewpoint.

Albert Herring. Op 39 1947 From a story by Guy de Maupassant. Village innocent becomes May King when no virgin queens can be found. He gets drunk and grows up. All ends happily, which is rare in Britten's operas. The gentle humour and kindness of the lead character is a simple gem.

The Little Sweep. Op 45 1949 AChildren's opera about a boy who gets stuck in the chimney.

Billy Budd. Op 50 1951 The trial and execution of a good man caught up in the turmoils of life onboard a warship.

Gloriana . Op 53 1953 Written for the Coronation of Elizabeth II but I believe she either did not like the way in which Elizabeth I was portrayed or perhaps she did not like the music but as unlikely as it seems I once heard that she walked out (perhaps not). Her musical tastes alas, are not one of her many outstanding qualities. It remained unperformed for many years but has now returned to the repertoire and I consider it my favourite Britten opera. The final monologue being one of the most moving segments in opera. - at least the Sarah Walker performance I have seen on video.

The Turn of the Screw. Op 54 1954 Everyone knows this ghost story of the governess and the torment of the sexually abused young Miles. An intelligent and profound insight into the tale that I have seen many times in both opera and the many films drawn from this story by Henry James.

Noye's Fludde. Op 591957 Meant to be performed by ordinary people in a place other than a theatre just like the Medieval Chester Miracle Plays, this is the story God, Mr and Mrs Noye and the flood.

A Midsummer Night's Dream. Op 64 1960 Based on Shakespeare's play.

Curlew River. Op 71 1964 This parable for church performance is one of the great works that first caught my attention. Several years back I and some opera fans decided we wanted to mount a production of this in the Anglican Cathedral in Brisbane. We gathered the interest and commitment of several of Australia's leading singers, a director from the National company and other musicians. They were all prepared to do it for no pay because the work itself inspired them so much everyone wanted to participate. Like many of my plans it failed to eventuate. Not through lack of enthusiasm by the artists - just my cowardice and laziness. In 1988 I was lucky to see a performance of Sumidagawa (Sumida River) which is the Medieval Japanese Noh-play upon which Britten based this work. The Kabuki styled production starred Japans 'Very Important Intangible Cultural Property' (or Living National Treasure) Nakamura Utaemon who was 71 at the time. I recall clearly the standing ovation by an audience unaccustomed to this style but overcome by true grace, beauty, style and genius.

The Burning Fiery Furnace. Op 77 1966 Another church parable

The Golden Vanity Op 78 1966 A vaudeville for boys and piano after the old English ballad

The Prodigal Son. Op 81 1968 The third church parable

Owen Wingrave. Op 85 1970 A philosophical work about a young man and his stand against his ancestral past. Made for Television.

Death in Venice. Op 88 1973 The last great opera and dedicated to the work that has inspired me for many years. There is a page of this story on this site. The image of Aschenbach being seduced into death by the obsession of beauty, personified in the character of the boy Tadzio, to me reveals much of the life of Britten. He wrote mainly for the male voice and many his stories revolved around mans destruction of, or by, the innocence or beauty of the young male. When the film of the Opera was due to be made Peter Pears (left) was not well and Australian singer Robert Gard (right), who had a great success in the role of Aschenbach here in Australia, went to England to stand in during rehearsals but as it turned out he eventually took over the role when the film was made. I was lucky to have known Robert Gard many years ago and shared a drink after performances here.

Pepi and I want to share some cultural interests. Pepi is my fabulous singing dog. He takes his name from Pharaoh Pepi II who Ruled Egypt from the age of 6 to 100 around 2200 BCE. I began this blog to share with you the many and varied things I do, study or admire. I am gay and I suspect my dog may be as well, so the content here is what appeals to me and has a slant towards gay artists and history, but not exclusively. My previous sites attracted a couple of million visitors, hundreds of whom wrote to me. I hope you enjoy your visits. The content of this site is also illustrated with a lot of my photography and extracts from my writings. I do add to and revise old posts from time to time.